At least 15 colleges and universities worldwide are hosting events to edit Wikipedia articles about art to make them feminist.

"How the site is written has a political impact, I think," said multimedia artist and digital designer Krystal South, who is helping run a “Wikipedia Edit-a-Thon on Art and Feminism” at Portland State University on Saturday.

"It's aesthetically very masculine in its design."

In addition to Portland State, there are at least eight other American colleges and universities hosting the event, including the University of Texas, Michigan State University, the University of Iowa, and the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Sarah Stierch, a Wikipedia editor who has worked with event co-organizer Wikimedia to increase female participation, said the very appearance of the Wikipedia website proves it is skewed towards males.

Another group involved in organizing the event, “art and technology center” Eyebeam, which “challenges convention … educates the next generation … and invites the public to share in a spirit of openness,” claims that since there are “more articles on notable women missing when compared to Encyclopaedia Britannica—Wikipedia is clearly skewed.”

Eyebeam also cited a 2010 study which found that fewer than 13 percent of Wikipedia editors were female. Stierch, however, explained that the actual number may be higher because editors often choose not to disclose their gender. She also argues that many women simply choose not to edit the website.

Joseph Reagle, an assistant professor at Northeastern University, however, said that women are not capable of making a true choice whether or not to participate because of Wikipedia’s “brogrammer' locker-room type of environment."

This campaign is not the first time a feminist group has organized an effort to edit the free encyclopedia.

Last fall, 15 colleges and universities offered college credit to students who “write feminist thinking” into Wikipedia articles about technology.

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